Boston Tea Party

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    America's history is the Boston Tea Party. The East India Company had lost a lot of tea that the company couldn’t sell into England, so the British decided to pass the Tea Act of 1773. The act allowed the East India company to sell their tea to the American colonists without any taxes. The American colonists were angry because the act would give the East India Company a monopoly on tea sales in the colonies, so the American colonists retaliated by dumping tea into the Boston Harbor. The group of American

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    The Boston Tea Party was a tremendous moment in history that was caused by many factors and had many lasting effects that led to the war that shaped our country into what it is today, The Revolutionary War. The Boston Tea Party occurred due to the creation of The Tea Act in 1773. The colonists retaliated by taking tea off of a British boat and throwing it into the harbor. This led to the creation of The Intolerable Acts, and the beginning of The Revolutionary War. The creation of The Tea Act was

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    At first glance, the Boston Tea Party may not appear to be a terrorist attack, because the ships were not damaged, except for one broken padlock, and no one was hurt, but it could be a terrorist attack, according to the Patriot Act. The Boston Tea Party was a political protest by the Sons of Liberty, who were an organization which was formed to protect the rights of the people and to fight taxation from the British government, in which the colonists, who were disguised as Indians, destroyed an entire

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    The Boston Tea Party was a very hectic occasion in United States History. “The American Revolution created heroes- and traitors- who shaped the birth of a new nation: the United States of America. “Taxation without representation” was a serious problem for the American colonies in the late 1700s. Great Britain imposed harsh taxes and did not give the colonists a voice in their own government. The colonists rebelled and declared their independence from Britain- the war was on.”(Somervill & Burgan

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    Boston Tea Party On the night of December 16, 1773, Samuel Adams and the Sons of Liberty, dressed as Mohican Indians, boarded three ships in the Boston harbor and threw 342 chests of tea overboard, in direct defiance of the British for imposing taxes on the colonials, which had no representation in Parliament. This act of defiance laid the ground work for much of the American Revolution as the colonists grew tired of British rule. It also hardened the feelings of the British against the Americans

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    12/9/12 Boston Tea Party In 1773 parliament passed the tea act in which the British pay less for tax to ship places. This made the prices of tea lower from Britain. Since Boston's tea would be more expensive nobody would buy it from them. The tea act was just another problem adding up between the colonists and britain. This made the colonists want to be independent from Britain. The colonists decided to rebel and dumb three hundred and forty two chests of tea into the Boston Harbor. The

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    Actually, there was no violence at all after the Boston Tea Party. As most people that commit a heinous crime leave the scene, the people who participated in the Tea Party also left after they committed the crime. They did not stick around to talk about what they just did, they went to their homes and laid low. One of the members mentioned, “We then quietly

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    On the night of December 16, 1773 the Boston Tea Party became a crucial part in American history. This incident was an act of rebellion against the British government that was led by Samuel Adams and the Sons of Liberty. Prior to the affair the patriots dressed as American Indians. Without delay the Sons of Liberty stepped aboard three ships and threw an entire shipment of East India Company tea into Boston Harbor. This protest was a reaction to the Tea Act of 1773 that was passed by British Parliament

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    Primary Source Analysis Paper 1: The Boston Tea Party George R.T. Hewes wrote the following reminiscence of the Boston Tea Party almost 61 years after it occurred. It is likely that his memories included more than a few stories he picked up well after 1773. Hewes himself was involved in the protest in Boston harbor led by the Son’s of Liberty, so he has an actual image of what happened on that day. Nonetheless, Hewes provides a highly detailed account of this important event. As of the year 1773

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    words of Margaret Mead, the American Cultural Anthropologists, summarize most historical events where people unite towards a purpose. The cultural identity of a country is molded when its people unite for a cause; one such event is the Boston Tea Party. The Boston Tea party is an important watershed in American history, one that determined the American identity forever. The establishment of independence from British colonization however did not happen overnight. The uprising was organized, carried out

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